Bug Parade – Flashcards

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
Vibrio cholerae biology
answer
comma-shaped, G- rod, 2 chromosomes, oxidase+, single polar flagellum, akali tolerant, O1 and O139 strains cause disease
question
Vibrio cholerae virulence factors
answer
mucinase, flagellum, pili (adherence and prevent elimination)
cholera toxin and regulation by ToxR
question
Vibrio cholerae pathogenesis
answer
entry: fecal-oral, large inoculum
attach: epithelial of small intestine, no invastion
incubate: 2-3 days
Symp: abrupt onset, non-inflammatory diarrhea and vomit, "rice water" stool, rapid fluid loss, dehydration
Resolve: self-limiting if dehydration controlled, 60% mortality w/o tx
question
Vibrio cholerae epidemiology
answer
underdeveloped countries due to poor sanitation
U.S.: contaminated seafood, travel to endemic areas
question
Vibrio cholerae diagnosis
answer
culture stool: grows on alkaline pH
clinical: exposure, diet, diarrhea volume and description, outbreak detection
question
Vibrio cholerae treatment
answer
fluid and electrolyte replacement
antibiotics: erythromycin, (tetracylcine)
question
Vibrio cholerae prevention
answer
no vaccine available
sanitary water sources
don't eat poop
question
Vibrio parahaemolyticus biology
answer
curved, G- rod, halophilic, motile
question
Vibrio parahaemolyticus virulence factors
answer
cytotoxins with enterotoxic activity
question
Vibrio parahaemolyticus pathogenesis
answer
self-limiting gastroenteritis
incubate: 5-72 hours, abrupt onset
watery diarrhea and vomiting
question
Vibrio parahaemolyticus epidemiology
answer
seafood-associated diarrhea (summer)
case clusters (common source)
question
Vibrio parahaemolyticus therapy
answer
supportive only
antibiotics - only if severe, doxycycline, criprofloxacin
question
Vibrio vulnificus biology
answer
curved, G- rod, halophilic, motile
question
Vibrio vulnificus virulence factors
answer
acidic polysaccharide capsule (antiphagocytic, resist C')
pore-forming cytotoxin, proteases
question
Vibrio vulnificus pathogenesis
answer
primary sepsis: contaminated seafood causes invasive gastroenteritis, invades gut wall to blood stream, mortality >40% w/ tx
rapid progress cellulitis: contaminated wound, inflammation of skin and subcutaneous tissue, rapid spread causes blisters and bullae (flaccid), bloodstream access, sepsis
question
Vibrio vulnificus epidemiology
answer
U.S.: costal waters, contaminated seafood or water
Increased risk: liver disease, alcoholism, hermochromatosis, hematopoietic disease, or other chronic diseases
question
Vibrio vulnificus treatment
answer
antibiotics: doxycyline, cirprofloxacin
support for sepsis
question
Vibrio vulnificus prevention
answer
avoid undercooked seafood
proper wound care
question
Helicobacter pylori biology
answer
spiral/S-shaped G-, motile, microaerophile, oxidase+, catalase+
question
Helicobacter pylori virulence factors
answer
flagella (polar tuft)
mucinase, adhesions (non-pilus)
hemagglutinin, sialic acid-binding protein, Lewis blood group adhesion, cytotoxins, urease (breaks urea to CO2 and NH4)
question
Helicobacter pylori pathogenesis
answer
entry: fecal-oral
target: stomach
disease: chronic gastritis
90% of duodenal ulcers, 50-80% of gastric ulcers
predisposes to gastric carcinoma and gut-associated lymphoma
question
Helicobacter pylori epidemiology
answer
50% of U.S. population has
question
Helicobacter pylori diagnosis
answer
non-invasive: urea breath test, serology, stool Ag test
invasive: biopsy for histology and rapid urease test
question
Helicobacter pylori treatment
answer
cocktail antibiotics (metronidazole + tetracyline or macrolide), acid-inhibitor, anti-inflammatory med
question
Campylobacter jejuni biology
answer
curved, G- rod, motile, microaerophilic, oxidase+, catalase+, grows at 42* but not at 25*C
question
Campylobacter jejuni virulence factors
answer
toxins, adhesins
LPS O-Ag sialic acid mimices ganglioside on neural tissue (Abs to will cause autoimmunity)
question
Campylobacter jejuni pathogenesis
answer
entry: oral
disease: invasive, inflammatory gastroenteritis
incubate: 1-7 dyas
symps: fever, chills, myalygia, headache, then acute onset of watery diarrhea (+/- blood), cramps
mild to severe
sequelae: Guillan-Barre syndrome (nerve autoimmune disease)
question
Campylobacter jejuni epidemiology
answer
leading cause of bacterial-food poisoning
undercooked/raw poultry and unpasteurized milk
question
Campylobacter jejuni diagnosis
answer
stool culture, selective media: grows at 42* but not 25*C
gram-stain (G- rod)
question
Campylobacter jejuni treatment
answer
supportive
severe, antibiotics: tetracycline, macrolides, quinolones
question
Campylobacter fetus biology
answer
curved, G- rod, motile, microaerophilic, oxidase+, catalase+, grows at 25* but not 42*C
question
Campylobacter fetus virulence factors
answer
protein capsule (S-layer)
question
Campylobacter fetus pathogenesis
answer
entry: oral route
disease: systemic infections (sepsis) that follow gastroenteritis episodes
question
Campylobacter fetus epidemiology
answer
rare in U.S., usually only immunocompromised
contaminated food (undercooked) or water
question
Campylobacter fetus diagnosis
answer
stool culture, selective media: grows at 25* but not 42*C
gram-stain (G- rod)
question
Campylobacter fetus treatment
answer
antibiotics: tetracyclines, macrolides, quinolones
support for sepsis
question
Clostridium perfringens biology
answer
large, G+ bacilli, spore forming, anaerobes, hisototoxic, non-motile, aerotolerant, 5 types (A-E) based on toxins, Type A is most human infections
question
Clostridium perfringens virulence factors
answer
major toxins: alpha, beta, epsilon, iota
enterotoxin is superantigen for T cells
question
Clostridium perfringens pathogenesis
answer
Gastroenteritis: oral entry, large inoculum, target small intestine, heat-labile enterotoxin from spores, adominal cramps, watery diarrhea

Cellulitis: subcutanenous tissue infection, multiply and release toxins, discoloration, gas formation, bullae, edema, non-pain, no necrosis
Supprative myositis: faciitis, wound contam with spores, toxin release, accumulation of pus, no necrosis or systemic involvement

Clostridial myonecoris: gas gangrene, wound with spores, toxin release, acute onset, severe pain, extensive muscle necrosis, skin discoloration, tachycardia, fever, intravascular hemolysis, shock, organ failure, 40-100% mortality

Necrotizing Enteritis: caused by Type C, necosis in jejunum, Beta-toxin, acute abdominal pain, vomiting, bloody diarrhea, perforation -> peritonitis and shock
question
Clostridium perfringens epidemiology
answer
soft tissue: wound, trauma, surgery, vascular insufficiency increases risk

gastro: comtaminated meats, cook then cooling period (spores germinate and multiply)
question
Clostridium perfringens diagnosis
answer
soft tissue: large G+ rods, lack of WBC invasion, gas in tissues (Xray or palp)

gastro: recovery from food or feces
question
Clostridium perfringens treatment
answer
soft tissue: penicillin

gas gangrene: surgical debridement, amputation, penicillin, clindamycin, metronidazole

gastro: supportive, no antibiotics
question
Clostridium perfringens preventation
answer
proper wound care
judicious prophalaxis
refrigerate food quickly, heat leftovers thoroughly
question
Clostridium difficile biology
answer
large, G+ bacilli, spore forming, strict anaerobes, hisotoxic, oxidase+, catalase+, motile
question
Clostridium difficile virulence factors
answer
adhesins for colonic epithelial
toxin A: damage tight junctions, increase permeability of gut, chemoattract for PMNs
toxin B: cytotoxin, destroys cytoskeleton, kills enterocytes
spores: longer survival in hospital setting
question
Clostridium difficile pathogenesis
answer
disease: antibiotic associated colitis
endogenous or exogenous infectio bns
entry: oral-fecal (spores or germination)
bacteria adhesins and toxins cause local damage with inflammation, self-limiting

Pseudomembranous colitis: fever, abdominal pain, bloating, cramping, fulminant watery diarrhea with WBC, inflammatory plaques
can progress to Toxin Megacolon
question
Clostridium difficile epidemiology
answer
high association with antibiotic use (5-10 d after start or 2-10weeks after finish)
hospitalized and elderly
question
Clostridium difficile diagnosis
answer
detect toxin A or B in stool (immunoassay)
question
Clostridium difficile treatment
answer
discontinue causitive antibiotic
tx antibiotic: metronidazole or ORAL vancomycin
question
Clostridium difficile prevention
answer
rapid diagnosis
contact precautions
rigorous hospital room cleaning
question
Clostridium botulinum biology
answer
large, G+ bacilli, spore forming, strict anaerobes, neurotoxic, motile, 7 serotypes (A-G)
Group I: A, B or F
Group II: B, E or F
produce botulinum toxin
question
Clostridium botulinum virulence factors
answer
spore formation
botulinum toxin: flaccid paralysis, heat-labile, AB toxin
B toxin - protects from degradation in gut
A - Zn-dependent endopeptidase; targets NMJ, no ACh release, flaccid
question
Clostridium botulinum pathogenesis
answer
Food-borne: intoxication; ingestion of toxin, enters blood stream, goes to peripheral nerves; incubate 12-71 hrs; dry mouth, diplopia, ptosis, pupil dilation, dyphagia, nausea, vomit; progresses to bilateral, descending wekanes; death from resp. failure; toxin binds irreversible, long reovery

Infant: infection; ingest spores, infects gut (poor NF); initially: constipation, weak cry, lethargy, poor feed/drink; progress: flaccid paralysis, floppy baby, respiratory distress; 1-2% die, in SIDS

Wound: infection; spores contaminate wound, produce toxin; incubate 4-14 days; similar to food-borne plus fever, leukocytosis, and co-infections
question
Clostridium botulinum epidemiology
answer
Food-borne: canned food, preserved fish
Infant: honey, dust
Wound: IV drug users
question
Clostridium botulinum diagnosis
answer
Food-borne: bioassay for toxin activity (serum, feces, gastric fluid, and implicated food)

Infant: culture from feces
question
Clostridium botulinum treatment
answer
respiratory support
antitoxin (equine >1y/o, human <1y>
wound only: penicillin metronidazole to follow antitoxin
question
Clostridium botulinum prevention
answer
heat food >60*
avoid honey for infants, breast feeding can be protective
proper wound care
question
Clostridium tentani biology
answer
large, G+ bacilli, spore forming, strict anaerobes, neurotoxin, motile, round terminal spores (tennis racket)
question
Clostridium tentani virulence factors
answer
spore formation
tetanolysin (oxygen-labile hemolysin)
tetanospasmin - heat-labile, AB toxin, B binds motor neurons, A is Zn-dependent endopeptidase
question
Clostridium tentani pathogeneis
answer
Tetanus: spastic paralysis; infection of spores in wound; incubate 1-21days, usually <8days; anaerobic causes germination, vegatative bacteria produce tetanospasmin, travels to blood, binds motor nerve endings, travels to CNS, blocks release of GABA, unregualted spastic activity; binds irreversibly, long recovery

Generalized: most common, trismus, risus sardinocus, body-wide spasms, opisthotonos, can progress to autonomic nerves

Localized: spasms at 1* infection site, indicates partial immunity or is the prodrome of generalized

Cephalic: head is 1* infection site

Neonatal: 1* infection at umbilical cord, becomes generalized, >90% mortality from apnea or sepsis
question
Clostridium tentani epidemiology
answer
rare in U.S., developing countries more prevalent
30-50% mortality
question
Clostridium tentani diagnosis
answer
clinical presentation, history of wound or prior vaccination
question
Clostridium tentani treatment
answer
debride 1* wound
passive immunization (TIG)
metronidazole
vaccinate with tetanus toxoid
supportive therapy until recovery
question
Clostridium tentani prevention
answer
vaccine: DTAP, 5 childhood, booster/10yr
prophilaxis: depends on vaccine hisotry
educate: about hygiene for cutting and cleaning umbilical cord
question
Corynebacterium diphtheriae biology
answer
G+ rod, nonmotile, aerobic, normal flora on skin, irregular club-shapted, "chinese leters", short chain myocolic acids in wall
question
Corynebacterium diphtheriae virulence factors
answer
diphtheria toxin - AB toxin, encoded on phage (lysogenic conversion), produced at site, travels in blood, targets heart and nerve cells
A - ADP-ribosylation enzyme, shuts down protein synthesis, host cell death
question
Corynebacterium diphtheriae pathogenesis
answer
Respiratory: 2-4 day incubate; sudden onset of malaise, low fever, sore throat, exudative pharyngitis (thick pseudomembrane that is adherent); systemic complications include myocarditis (1-2weeks) or neurophathy (10-30days) at oculomotor and ciliary nerves

Cutaneous: asymptomatic on carrier, trans by direct contact; papule --> pustule --> nonhealing ulcer that may have grayish membrane; co-infection with G+ cocci usually
question
Corynebacterium diphtheriae epidemiology
answer
Respiratory: poor urban areas around world, seen in elderly
Cutaneous: homeless, alcoholics, poor areas, reservations
question
Corynebacterium diphtheriae diagnosis
answer
clincal findings: start intial treatment
Grow on tellurite medium -> black colonies
toxin production (immunoassay, PCR tox gene)
takes a long time for confirmation
question
Corynebacterium diphtheriae treatment
answer
Respiratory: keep airway open, antitoxin from CDC

Cutaneous and resp: penicillin, macrolide, tetracycline
after recover, immunize with toxoid
question
Corynebacterium diphtheriae prevention
answer
DTaP vaccine
prophylaxis of close contacts
isolate respiratory pts
contact precautions with cutaneous pts
question
Bordetella pertussis biology
answer
G- coccobacillus, strict anaerobe, very small, nonmotile
question
Bordetella pertussis virulence factors
answer
tracheal cytotoxin (TCT) - disacch tetrapeptide like PG, binds and kills epithelial cells, induces IL-1 and fever
pertussis toxin (PT) - AB5 toxin, ribosylates G-protein, cAMP increase, increase mucus secretion
hemolysin - increases cAMP directly, inhibits chemotaxis and phagocytosis by PMNs
adhesins (ciliated brochial epithelial), filamentous hemagglutinin, pertactin, fibriae
Type III secretion (proctects against host)
question
Bordetella pertussis pathogenesis
answer
disease: Whooping cough
entry: respiratory
incubate: 7-10days
Catarrhal stage - 1-2weeks, resembles common cold, most contagious, highest load
Paroxysmal: 1-6 weeks, ciliated cells dying, mucus clearance impaired, deep violent coughing followed by inspiratory whoop and possible vomiting
Convalescent: paroxysms diminish in # and severity, secondary complications still possible (pneumonia)
question
Bordetella pertussis epidemiology
answer
endemic worldwide
pretty common, rising incidence in U.S. due to incomplete vaccine regemine
question
Bordetella pertussis diagnosis
answer
PCR (culture)
question
Bordetella pertussis treatment
answer
supportive b/c recognized after peak load
macrolides if severe
question
Bordetella pertussis prevention
answer
DTaP vaccine
prophylaxis to close contacts to reduce carriage
question
Bacillus antracis biology
answer
G+ bacillus, pairs or long chains, large, spore-forming, aerobic, nonmotile, nonhemolytic, grow rapidly in culture
question
Bacillus antracis virulence factors
answer
Capsule - poly-D-glutamic acid, invasive
Toxins (EF/PA or LF/PA)
Edema factor - adenylate cyclase, increases [cAMP], hypersecretion, edema in tissues
Lethal factor - Zn-dependent endopeptidase, induces apoptosis, necrosis of cells, tissue damage
Protective antigen - binding component, combines with and delivers EF or LF
question
Bacillus antracis pathogenesis
answer
Inhalation: spores in, move to LRT, multiply in lymph nodes; incubate 1-7days; initally flu-like, later worse pulm (necrosis, hemorrhage, effusion), elargemetn of lymph nodes, meningitis (50%), high fever, shock; die in 3 days w/o tx

Cutaneous: spores in cut, painless pustule surrounded by vesicles, regional lymphadenopathy, black/painless eschar with massive edema; 20% die w/o tx, rare with tx

GI: enter oral route; incubate 2-5days; abdominal pain, messenteric lymphadenopathy, nausea, vomit, diarrhea, GI necrosis, ulcer of mouth/throat, progresses to sepsis and shock; mortality 100% w/in few days
question
Bacillus antracis epidemiology
answer
Inhalation: rare in U.S., bio-terrorism organism, wool-sorters

Cutaneous: 95% of natural cases of this microbe

GI: very rare, herbivores
question
Bacillus antracis diagnosis
answer
microscopy/culture: grows fast to high numbers, motile, hemolytic
PCR - new, faster
question
Bacillus antracis treatment
answer
1st line: penicillin, doxycyline, ciprofloxacin
combo with other antibiotics
question
Bacillus antracis prevention
answer
Vaccine: for animals, humans in military and handling imported animal products
prophylaxis for 60days if exposed
question
Bacillus cereus biology
answer
G+ bacillus, large, spore-forming, aerobic, hemolytic, transient colonize skin
question
Bacillus cereus virulence factors
answer
heat-stable and heat-labile toxins
question
Bacillus cereus pathogenesis
answer
Emetic food: ingest contaminated rice; spores survive cook, germinate during cooling, produce toxins; incubate 30min-6hrs, heat-stable enterotoxin inudces nauesea, vomiting, abdominal cramps; duration 8-12 hours

Diarrheal Food: ingest contaminated meat, vegetables, sauces; spores survive cooking, germinate in gut; incubation 9-18hrs; heat-labile toxin acts like cholera toxin, induces [cAMP] causing water diarrhea, duration 20-36 hrs
question
Bacillus cereus treatment
answer
supportive no antibiotics
severe: vancomycin or clindamycin
question
Bacillus cereus prevention
answer
proper food handling and storage
question
Pseudomonas aeruginosa biology
answer
G- rod, aerobic, non-fermentative, oxidase+, fluorescein pigments: pyocyanin and pyoverdin, sweet culture odor; forms clear colony on MacConkey
question
Pseudomonas aeruginosa virulence factors
answer
multi-drug resistant, simple growth requirements, versatile
pilus, flagella
ETA - inhibits protein synthesis
S and T exoenzymes - cytotoxic, manipulate actin rearrangment, secreted by T3SS
elastase, protease, hemolysins, pyocyanin, pyoverdin, quorum sensing, capsule, biofilm
question
Pseudomonas aeruginosa pathogenesis
answer
Normal hosts: foliculitis, otitis externa, eye infections, endocarditis (IV drug users), pneumonia (ventilator, high mortality), UTIs, IV-line sepsis

Abnormal hosts:
Chronic colonization: pulmonary infection; increased mucus secretion from CF pts, long-term infection; loses pili, flagella and O antigesn, upregulates biofilm w/ quorom sensing; loss of lung function from inflammatory destruction

Invasive mode: malignant otitis externa (diabetics)

Systemic infection: ecthyma gangrenosum, hemorrhagic lesions on skin due to elastase production
question
Pseudomonas aeruginosa epidemiology
answer
Oppportunistic: antibiotic treatment, foreign body, VAP, IMC, burn pts, CF pts

Chronic - cystic fibrosis
Invasive - diabetes mellitus
Systemic - neutropenic, burn pts, pneumonia, and CF pts
question
Pseudomonas aeruginosa diagnosis
answer
green pigmentation of culture
fruit odor
oxidase+
clear growth on MacConkey
question
Pseudomonas aeruginosa treatment
answer
aminoglycoside + anti-pseudomonas B-lactam
question
Pseudomonas aeruginosa prevention
answer
avoid broad spectrum antibiotics in general
prevent contamination of sterile objects
question
Escherichia coli biology
answer
G- rod, oxidase-
question
Escherichia coli virulence factors
answer
O antigen, H antigen, K/Vi antigen, endotoxin, capsule, antigenic phase variation, T3SS, antibiotic resistance plasmids
question
Escherichia coli pathogenesis
answer
UTI: normal flora of GI travel up to kidney, uropathogenic E coli more virulent (P pili and HlyA)

Neonatal: 2nd most common cause of meningitis, K-1 capsular antigen strain, not normal flora but found in pregger GI, high mortality

Bacteremia and sepsis
question
Escherichia coli epidemiology
answer
UTI - women, newly married, elderly, urinary catheters
question
Escherichia coli diagnosis
answer
UTI - gram stain, oxidase test (-)

Neonatal - ultrasound, showing brain abnormality
question
Escherichia coli treatment
answer
UTI - trimethoprim
question
Escherichia coli prevention
answer
UTI - cleaning urethral meatus, cranberries, blueberries
question
Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) virulence factors
answer
T3SS, intimin, Tir, pili
question
Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) pathogenesis
answer
loose attachment by pili, pestal formation induced by T3SS: injects Tir which is expressed by host then and is receptor for intimin adhesin on bacterium

attaches to epithelial cells of small intestine, destroys microvilli, cause watery diarrhea, incubates 2-6days, acute onset, lasts 1-3 weeks
question
Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) epidemiology
answer
developing countries, esp. infant diarrhea
question
Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) diagnosis
answer
lactose fermentation, green sheen on EMB agar, culture, serotype, probe for exotocins
question
Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) treatment
answer
treat symptoms
disseminated: fluoroquinolone and susceptibility testing
question
Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) virulence factors
answer
high ID(50);
heat-labile (LT-I and LT-II) - like cholera, increases cAMP -> increase solute secretion
heat-stable (STa and STb) - cGMP mediated fluid secretion
question
Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) pathogenesis
answer
1-2 day incubation
diarrhea for 3-4 days
question
Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) epidemiology
answer
developing coutries, traveler's diarrhea, feces-contaminated food or water
question
Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) diagnosis
answer
lactose fermenation, green sheen on EMB agar, culture, serotype, probe for exotoxins
question
Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) treatment
answer
treat symptoms
disseminated: fluoroquinolones and susceptibility testing
question
Enterohermorrhagic E. coli (EHEC, STEC, VTEC) virulence factors
answer
low ID(50), shiga-like verotoxin
Stx1 - binds to 28S rRNA, destroys intestinal villi,
Stx2 - targets and destroys endothelial cells
question
Enterohermorrhagic E. coli (EHEC, STEC, VTEC) pathogenesis
answer
Hermorrhagic colitis: incubate: 3-4 days; watery diarrhea with abdominal pain, vomit (50%), after 2 days, bloody diarrhea, intense ab pain, no fever; requires hospitaliztion, resolves ~1wk

HUS: shiga-toxin enters systemic circulation; acute renal failure, hemolytic anemia, thrmobocytopenia; 5-10 days after dairrhea onset
question
Enterohermorrhagic E. coli (EHEC, STEC, VTEC) epidemiology
answer
developed countires
"hamburger disease", unpasteurized milk, fruit juice, uncooked vegetables, fruits
question
Enterohermorrhagic E. coli (EHEC, STEC, VTEC) diagnosis
answer
MacConkey agar with sorbitol, serology O157 antigen, stool containing Shiga-like toxin
question
Enterohermorrhagic E. coli (EHEC, STEC, VTEC) treatment
answer
supportive, monitor for HUS

no antibiotics b/c would increase toxin release
question
Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC) virulence factors
answer
pInv genes - for invasion of colonic epithelium
question
Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC) pathogenesis
answer
2-3day incubation, water diarrhea to dysentery-like syndrome (mucoid, bloody diarrhea, cramps, fever), lasts 1-2wks
question
Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC) epidemiology
answer
rare in US, uncommon in developing countries
question
Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC) diagnosis
answer
lactose fermentation, green sheen on EMB agar, culture, serotype, probe for exotoxins
question
Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC) treatment
answer
treat symptoms
disseminated: fluoroquinolone and susceptibility testing
question
Enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC) virulence factors
answer
bundle-forming fimbriae causes autoagglutination
question
Enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC) pathogenesis
answer
persistent watery diarrhea
causes dehydration and growth retardation in children
question
Enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC) epidemiology
answer
developing countries
question
Enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC) diagnosis
answer
lactose fermentation, green sheen on EMB agar, culture, serotype, probe for exotoxins
question
Enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC) treatment
answer
treat symptoms
disseminated: fluoroquinolones and susceptibility testing
question
Shigella dysenteriae biology
answer
G- rod, oxdiase-, faculative anaerobe, non-lactose fermentor, nonmotile, low ID(50)
question
Shigella dysenteriae virulence factors
answer
invasion plasmid
IpaD - recognizes receptors on enterocytes
IpaA and IpaB - promotes invasion
T3SS - injects IpaA and IpaB
IL-1b - secreted by infected cells, attracts PMNs and leukocytes
Shiga toxin - inhibits protein synthesis by cleaving 28S rRNA
question
Shigella dysenteriae pathogenesis
answer
Trans: fecal-oral (contaminated salads, like potato, shrimp, chicken, tuna), raw veggies, dairy products, meat, water, food handlers
incubate: 1-7dyas
small volume diarrhea, mild abdominal discomfort to full-blown dysentery (cramps, fever, diarrhea, vomit, blood, pus or mucous in stools), mucosal ulceration, rectal bleeding dehydration
question
Shigella dysenteriae epidemiology
answer
daycare outbreaks, children
question
Shigella dysenteriae diagnosis
answer
fecal leukocytes, culture stool
question
Shigella dysenteriae treatment
answer
FQ and guided susceptibility
question
Salmonella enteritidis biology
answer
G- rod, oxidase-, motile, non-lactose fermentors, high ID(50)
question
Salmonella enteritidis virulence factors
answer
T3SS - SPI-1 and SPI-2, resistance to acid (ATR gene)
question
Salmonella enteritidis pathogenesis
answer
Trans: contaminated poultry, eggs, water or contact with contaminated pet;
target: infection limited to lumen of intestine
incubate: 18-36hrs
symps: abdominal pain, diarrhea, fever, headache, chil, self-limiting in few days
question
Salmonella enteritidis epidemiology
answer
major cause of gastroenteritis
3rd most common food-poisoning agent
in elderly and infants, can be life-threatening
question
Salmonella enteritidis treatment
answer
no antibiotics, might prolong disease
question
Salmonella typhi biology
answer
G- rod, oxidase-, motile, non-lactose fermentors
question
Salmonella typhi virulence factor
answer
TS3 - SPI-1 and SPI-2, resistant to acid (ATR gene), low ID(50), replication/spread in macrophages, persistent in gallbladder
question
Salmonella typhi pathogenesis
answer
trans: fecal-oral, contaminated food or water, person-to-person
Typhoid fever: severe systemic, sustained fever and abdominal symptoms
1st week - rising, stepwise fever, bacteremia
2nd week - abdomen pain and rose spot rash on abdomen and trunk
3rd week - hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, intestinal bleeding
question
Salmonella typhi epidemiology
answer
developing countries
question
Salmonella typhi diagnosis
answer
culture from blood or marrow
question
Salmonella typhi treatment
answer
FQ or chloramphenicol
question
Salmonella typhi prevention
answer
vaccines: capsule or live
question
Klebsiella pneumoniiae biology
answer
G- rod, oxidase negative, nonmotile, ferments lactose, normal flora in GI and URT 5%
question
Klebsiella pneumoniiae virulence factors
answer
prominent capsule with mucoid appearance
question
Klebsiella pneumoniiae pathogenesis
answer
common cuase of community acquired primary lobar pneumonia
thick bloody sputum with currant-jelly appearance
question
Klebsiella pneumoniiae epidemiology
answer
alcoholics with compromised pulmonary function
question
Klebsiella pneumoniiae treatment
answer
cephalosporins
question
Enterobacter biology
answer
G- rod, oxidase negative
question
Enterobacter virulence factor
answer
ESBL - expended spectrum beta-lactamases
effective against 3rd generation beta-lactams
question
Enterobacter pathogenesis
answer
UTI in patients with urinary catheters

Bacteremia in ICU
question
Enterobacter epidemiology
answer
urinary catheters and ICU
question
Serratia biology
answer
G- rod, oxidase-
question
Serratia pathogenesis
answer
nosocomial pneumonia
question
Proteus biology
answer
G- rod, oxiase-
question
Proteus pathogenesis
answer
nosocomial and community-acquired pylonephritis and cytitis
kideny stones
question
Proteus diagnosis
answer
swarming motility
powerful urease activity
question
Yersinia enterocolitica biology
answer
G- rod, faculatative anaerobic, siderophilic
question
Yersinia enterocolitica virulence factors
answer
grows at 4* C
Yop proteins - encoded on plasmids, injected via T3SS, prevent phagocytosis, induces apoptosis of macrophages, suppresses cytokine production
question
Yersinia enterocolitica pathogenesis
answer
Gastroenteritis with contaminated foods

Blood-transfusion related bateremia
question
Yersinia pestis biology
answer
G- rods, facultative anaerobes, siderophilic, zoonotic
question
Yersinia pestis virulence factors
answer
Yop proteins - encoded on plasmids, injected via T3SS, prevent phagocytosis, induces apoptosis of macrophages, suppresses cytokine production
Capsule, plasminogen activating protease (rapid spread), serum resistant factor
question
Yersinia pestis pathogenesis
answer
Urban plague, Black Death, Sylvatic plague
Trans: aerosol, fleas are host, rodents are reservoir

Bubonic plague: incubate 7 days; sudden onset of fever, chills, weakness, headache, painful bulbo in groin/axilla, bacteremia, subepidrual hemorrhages, necrosis of extremities; 75% fatality

Pneumonic plague: 2* from bubonic or 1* from inhalation; rapid progressive necrotic pneumonia, highly infectious, 90% fatality
question
Yersinia pestis epidemiology
answer
Category A bioterrorism agent
question
Yersinia pestis diagnosis
answer
Suspicion when: fever and painful lymphadenopathy, traveled to endemic area, contact with vector
Culture and bipolar staining

RPT: F1 antigen detection, high specificity and sensitivity
question
Yersinia pestis treatment
answer
streptomycin or tetracyline
respiratory isolation (until pneumonia is ruled out, 48 hrs of therapy, and sputum culture is negative)
question
Bacteroides fragilis biology
answer
G- rod, strict anaerobic, endogenous (normal flora)
question
Bacteroides fragilis virulence factors
answer
capsule
B. fragilis toxin
extracellular enzymes
question
Bacteroides fragilis pathogenesis
answer
Abdominal abscesses and bacteremia
Wound exudates have strong, foul-smelling discharge due to organic acid production
question
Bacteroides fragilis diagnosis
answer
growth in 20% bile
collect and transport in oxygen-free environment
question
Bacteroides fragilis treatment
answer
Metronidazole + surgery + antibiotics for G- aerobic infection if mixed

resistant to kanamycin, vancomycin and colistin
question
Peptostreptococcus biology
answer
G+ cocci, strict anaerobe, endogenous to mouth, GI tract and genital tract
question
Peptostreptococcus pathogenesis
answer
wound infections, aspiration pneumonia, lung abscesses, brain abscesses, chronic otitis media, OBGYN infections
question
Actinomyces israellii biology
answer
G+ rod, strict anaerobe, filamentous, not acid fast
question
Actinomyces israellii pathogenesis
answer
colonize URT and GI tracts
Chonic granulmatous lesions: become supprative and form abscesses connected by sinus tract

Cervicofacial abscesses: patients with poor oral hygine or recent invasive dental procedure
question
Actinomyces israellii diagnosis
answer
sulfur granules: macroscopic colonies like grains of sand
question
Actinomyces israellii treatment
answer
penicillin + surgical intervention
Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New